Red Star Towing & Transp. Co. v. Russell No. 7

70 F. Supp. 713, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2844
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 20, 1947
DocketNo. 17541
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 F. Supp. 713 (Red Star Towing & Transp. Co. v. Russell No. 7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Red Star Towing & Transp. Co. v. Russell No. 7, 70 F. Supp. 713, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2844 (E.D.N.Y. 1947).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

The Seaboard No. 35, loaded with ballast which was to be discharged at the dock of Tully & DiNapoli, Inc., respondent-impleaded, in Flushing Creek, had on June 7, 1945 been brought to that dock by a Russell tug. By that tug it was placed outside of the Radio, another scow. That berth was maintained until the night of June 8, when another Russell tug, which is the tug libelled in this action, arrived with the Fowler, another loaded scow. This scow was placed outside the Seaboard No. 35 and was made fast thereto. Up to that time, though in the interval the Seaboard No. 35 in low tide was on the ground, no damage had been done to the boat. After that, the Russell No. 7 pulled the Radio out from, next to the dock, and the Seaboard No. 35 and the Fowler were “shoved” to the dock. !

After pulling the Radio out, the captain on the Russell No. 7 told Maljers, the bargee, to get a line to the Tully & DiNapoli dock. Maljers in reply said: “You had better tie me up alongside of a light scow instead of alongside the dock; there aint no water there for a heavy scow and at low tide I will be on the ground with this load”. Maljers insisted on his position, refused to tie up to the dock, and a deck hand from the Russell No. 7 was sent to make the line fast to the dock, and Maljers then made the line fast on the scow’s bitt, leaving, as he said, plenty of slack. ¡

As the Radio went out, however, the Seaboard No. 35 and Fowler also swung; out to the middle of the stream, but with ' the Seaboard No. 35 on the stern line to the dock, which had been put there by Braceo. The Russell No. 7 then pushed the Seaboard towards the dock, and Maljers put more lines out to secure his boat. ' During the night of June 8, Maljers, who had gone to his cabin, heard some, noise from the hold, and on investigation found that the No. 35 was listing away | from the dock at an angle of about 451 degrees. He also observed damage to, the X braces'. He said a couple of seams ; had started in the “scarphs there by the first section”. The following morning[714]*714McMorrow, from the Red Star Barge Line, arrived in response to a telephone call from Maljers, and on arrival found t'he No. 35 with its stern about 10 feet from the dock, and the bow about 15 or 20 feet away. He believed it was the port side that was toward the dock. He too found the list was off shore.

The Russell tug had no instructions where to place the loaded scows when brought in. The custom was to bring them in and place them at an available berth.

The Tully & DiNapoli proofs disclosed that they did no night work, suspending at about 4:30 p. m. Braceo, the foreman at the Tully & DiNapoli dock, explained that when he arrived on the morning of June 8, he found the Seaboard No. 35 was the third out from the dock, in back of the Cleary No. 54, at that end of the dock closest to the Northern Boulevard bridge, i. e. the northern end of the dock. The Radio was unloaded on June 8, and after that the Cleary No. 54. When he suspended operations on June 8, on that afternoon the Seaboard No. 35 was still the third boat out from the dock. He said that the Seaboard No. 35 on the morning of the 8th had a bad list off shore, at an angle of about twenty-two or twenty-five degrees. Braceo testified that he put out a line from the stem of the Seaboard No. 35 that afternoon to the dock, at about 15 or 20 feet from the northerly end of the dock. Braceo also testified that he instructed the scow captain, after the inside boats , were unloaded and taken out, that he was to pull the Seaboard No. 35 to the dock, and that the scowman replied that he would not pull it in because the water was too low. On June 9, when Braceo reported to work at 7:30 a. m., he found the Seaboard No. 35 was outside of two other ballast boats in the south tier, towards Roosevelt Avenue. That is not supported, and is contradicted. It was not until June 11 that the Seaboard No. 35 was unloaded. Previously, on June 9, the bargeman had complained that there had been damage done on his boat. After Braceo started unloading on June 11 there was no further list to the scow. The loading had been heavy on the stern. He had brought the scow No. 35 in close to the dock on the morning of the 11th. There had been about seven hundred tons of ballast on the boat.

The crane operator at the dock corroborated Braceo with respect to the putting out of the line from the Seaboard No. 35 to the dock, and also to the effect that the Seaboard No. 35, on the afternoon of June 8, was at the north end of the dock, the third boat from the dock; and also with respect to the list of the Seaboard No. 35 on June 8. But he said that on the 9th the list was towards the dock. On the 11th, when about twenty buckets of ballast were taken off, the list disappeared.

To succeed in this libel the burden is upon the libellant to prove negligence on the part of either or both the claimant and the respondent-impleaded. The libellant’s position is that against the protest of the bargee of the Seaboard No. 35, the barge was shifted by the Russell No. 7 alongside the dock, and that in consequence at low water the scow rested on an uneven bottom of such character as to cause the specific damage which is complained of. The libellant encountered difficulty in proof of both propositions. No matter how detailed the scrutiny is of the available evidence in this case, it is impossible to determine from the conflict in testimony given by all of the parties, exactly where the tug No. 7 placed the Seaboard No. 35. This conflict exists not only when the testimony of one is compared with that of the others; but Maljers contradicts himself and is uncertain on this vital question. The same weakness was shown by Needham, the captain of the Russell No. 7. That the scow was alongside the dock with a line 15 feet in length from the stern to one of the bitts is the testimony of the bargee, but he was very vague in his recital of the position of his boat with respect to the north or south end of the Tully & DiNapoli dock at the time that the damage was sustained. In the absence of proof of that berth it is impossible to make a finding from his testimony or from the testimony of anybody else just exactly what that berth was. In consequence it is idle speculation to de[715]*715termine what the nature was of the bottom on which the Seaboard No. 35 at that time rested. Taking Red Star Exhibit 2, which shows soundings along the Tully & DiNapoli dock as shown on a survey made July 13, 1945, it may be conceded that the survey shows an uneven bottom, but on what part of that bottom did the Seaboard No. 35 rest?

And whether an uneven bottom was the cause of the damage disclosed in the survey held of the vessel when it was placed in dry-dock, presents a problem in mechanics on which the experts disagree.

The survey of damage discloses a broken keelson in Bay 4, counting from the stern; one X brace in Bay 5 (from stem) crushed on top; fifth deck stringer from port side in Bay 6 crushed on under side by disturbed X brace; fifth deck beam from stern in Bay 4 crushed on the bottom; second deck stringer on port side crushed by X brace; deck beam in Bay 9 crushed by X brace, and deck stringer in Bay 9 crushed on bottom of X brace.

It is to be noted that there was no bottom damage. It is true that Hansen, a marine surveyor called by the libellant, testified that he had attended other surveys in which it appeared that keelsons had been broken as a result of grounding, with no damage to bottom planking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
70 F. Supp. 713, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/red-star-towing-transp-co-v-russell-no-7-nyed-1947.